Economy Languishes In Low Gear
Private Sector Measure Of Economic Health Shows Largest Drop In A Year
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(CBS/AP)
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The New York-based Conference Board said Thursday its monthly forecast of future economic activity fell 0.7 percent in July, far more than the consensus estimate of a 0.2 percent decline by Wall Street economists surveyed by Thomson/IFR.
The last time the index showed a drop this great was last August, when it fell by 1 percent.
The largest drag on the index was the decline in building permits, followed by dropping stock prices, rising unemployment claims, a tightened money supply and falling manufacturers' orders for consumer goods. The index has slipped 0.9 percent for the six months ending in July.
"The economy is stuck somewhere between sluggish growth and recession," said Mark Vitner, senior economist at Wachovia Corp. "We're in economic purgatory."
Lehman Brothers economist Zach Pandl blamed the drop on technical factors, saying a change in New York City's building code, effective July 1, led to a June spike in new permits followed by last month's steep decline. He also attributed part of high jobless claims data to the 13-week extension of unemployment benefits approved by Congress in June.
"The decline in the leading index should therefore not be interpreted as a sign the outlook is quickly deteriorating," Pandl wrote in a research note.
Meanwhile, the Labor Department's jobless claims data showed new filings dropped to 432,000, down by 13,000 from the previous week, a greater improvement than analysts expected. However, the four-week average climbed to 445,750, the highest level since November 2003.
"The labor market is soft, but not collapsing," said Joel Naroff, chief economist at Naroff Economic Advisors in Holland, Pa. "That's critical. While consumers may be cautious and conservative in their spending, as long as the rate does not spike ... there should be enough income growth to keep the economy muddling along."
Unemployment claims have increased in the past several weeks, partly reflecting an outreach effort by the Labor Department to notify people of the benefit extension. The action has turned up some people eligible to file new claims.
That effort - coupled with businesses cutting jobs due to higher energy costs, tighter credit markets and a slowing economy - caused claims to spike to a six-year high of 457,000 for the week of Aug. 2.
The number of people continuing to receive benefits last week also dropped slightly to 3.36 million, but the four-week average rose to 3.33 million, its highest level in almost five years.
That number doesn't include the government's extended benefits program. The Labor Department estimated an additional 1.29 million unemployed workers are getting benefits under that program.
Wall Street shrugged off the numbers. Financial stocks rebounded after an analyst upgraded Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. to "buy," saying the investment bank has become a hostile takeover candidate.
The Dow Jones industrial average rose 12.78 to 11,430.21. The Standard & Poor's 500 rose 3.18 to 1,277.72, and the Nasdaq composite lost 8.70 to 2,380.38.
Still, companies likely will increase layoffs in the next several months as profits continue to suffer from higher food and energy prices, Vitner said. The unemployment rate could reach 6.5 percent by mid-2009, from 5.7 percent in July, he added.
Several companies have announced job cuts recently. Newspaper publisher Gannett Co. Inc. said it would lay off 600 workers, Ford Motor Co. said it would cut 300 workers at an engine plant, and chip designer Rambus Inc. is trimming 90 jobs.
To be sure, some companies are bucking that trend.
"We're always hiring," said Fred Bock, vice president of marketing and business planning at Peerless Pump Co. in Indianapolis, which makes fire protection pumps for high rises. Peerless Pump has seen international sales increase 20 percent in the last four years, helped by new construction in the Middle East and Asia.
© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.



But... but... but... McShame says the economy is "fundamentally strong"! (Even though his own campaign literature says the economy is bad, bad, bad!)
What is a person supposed to believe?
And, let''s never forget: McCain is a "straight-talker", a "common man"! By his own definition, he''s not even wealthy. (He says you''re not wealthy unless you have $5 million INCOME per year, independent of your countless millions of assets!) And McCain has so many houses, worth so many millions of dollars, that he can''t even say how many he owns without consulting his staff-- and they just guess it''s "at least 4"! (It''s actually 7 or more, worth $14 million or more, plus a ONE MILLION DOLLAR PARKING LOT!)
McCain is an OUT OF TOUCH ELITEST.
He doesn''t know ANYTHING about economics, yet he wants to run the country.
He doesn''t know who the players are in Iraq, yet he thinks he is qualified to be the commander in chief.
He doesn''t even know what sports team''s player''s names he told the Viet Cong in the "defining moment" of his life. (You know, the moment he realized torture does NOT work because it just makes the tortured lie to get you to stop torturing them. Too bad he seems to have "forgotten" that bit of wisdom!)
McCain is IN.SANE. Vote for McCain ONLY IF you are similarly incapacitated.
Posted by SistaTee at 10:21 PM : Aug 21, 2008
All of dat is done b done.....:-)
Posted by SistaTee at 10:21 PM : Aug 21, 2008
All of dat is done b done.....:-)
You guys at CBS need to get it together and "call it like it is" when it comes to this economy.
When you have the worse foreclosure crisis since the Great Depression, you don''t call that "languish" you call it a "Depression".
When you have the worse inflation in housing, gas, and food (WHICH IS EVERYTHING!!!!) since the Great Depression, you call it a "Depression".
When Bush''s first "recession" happened early in his 1st term and then called it a "jobless recovery", since then you added a paltry 50 to 60 thousand "Mickey Mouse jobs" a quarter that means you are no way keeping up with population growth and it''s the worse "underemployment" since the Great Depression.
You guys at CBS, Quit defending George Bush, John McCain, and the Republicans and tell the American people the truth about the economy, and that is...
IT''S ALREADY IN THE TANK!!!!!!
(HOW DARE REPUBLICANS SAY THAT OBAMA WILL TANK THE ECONOMY WHEN IT''S ALREADY TANKED!!!!!!!!!)
QUIT BLAMING OBAMA FOR AN ECONOMY THAT''S IN THE TANK ALREADY BECAUSE HE''S NOT EVEN PRESIDENT YET!!!!!
Don''t worry America. McCain says the economy is doing well. Of course he''s got 7 mansions and is worth over 100 million dollars but never mind that. The more he has, the more trickles down to you right?
Thanks for voting Republican.
lol!
Posted by downtowner97 at 12:18 AM : Aug 22, 2008
lollll...you guys are funny. You claim you didn''t vote for Kerry ''cuz of stuff like you mention above, but you insist that we should vote for McCain when he does the same stuff.
Man...those private prep and Ivy League schools you Republicans go to must be so scared of making you appear elitist that they don''t even teach ya big words like "hypocrite" anymore..
Now the dollar is worth 70 cents/Euro. The value in 2000 dollars of the stock market is 6,500."
Yes. Things are worse than they seem...
And BTW, I can work from home on occasion, so I need internet. But what I pay for it pales in comparison to the cost of gas and tolls to commute, plus, as I found out, it''s a very good ''investment'' to keep internet and e-mail if you find yourself looking for work.
In the U.K., where a housing problem mirrors the U.S., the growth rate and consumer spending cycles also mirror that of the U.S. but the U.K did not have a stimulous package! That says that the stimulous package really had no effect when you subtract what would have been a normal cycle. It was smoke and mirrors only.
Posted by jydavis1 at 02:29 PM : Aug 22, 2008
Yeah, right.
The economy is no where near the bottom. Won''t be for more than a year. Thanks to sub-prime, Bu$h''s deficits and the price of oil.
I will not shop!!!!
Mission Accomplished.
Vote Exxon John for more of the same.
Posted by jydavis1
No problem, as long as I can pay with your money.
The market has always inversely tracked human misery, back in the 70s people were losing tens of thousands of jobs, while the companies laying them off saw their stock values rise.
The greatest advances in the stock market always occurred in the wake of the decrease in earning nd buying power of the public. The Reagan boom as a jobless one, as was the Clinton boom. Bush only had minor upticks, like the subprime real estate bubble, on a plummeting economy, but he trumpeted those as booms, McSame is following the same trick.
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by payasyougo
August 23, 2008 9:57 PM PDT
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